RRND Email Full Text (Scheduled)

  • Norway: Three brothers arrested over US embassy blast in Oslo

    Source: The Guardian [UK]

    “Three Norwegian brothers have been arrested on suspicion of a ‘terrorist bombing’ at the US embassy in Oslo that caused minor damage at the weekend but no injuries. The police prosecutor Christian Hatlo told a press conference that the brothers, who were Norwegian citizens of Iraqi origin, had been arrested in Oslo and that police were investigating the motive. … The blast took place at around 1:00am local time on Sunday at the entrance to the embassy’s consular section. American embassies have been placed on high alert in the Middle East owing to US-Israeli strikes on Iran. Several have faced attacks as Tehran responds by targeting industrial and diplomatic facilities.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/11/three-norwegian-brothers-arrested-us-embassy-blast-oslo

  • Dementia becomes leading cause of death in Australia as experts call for “shift in thinking” about disease

    Source: Independent [UK]

    “Dementia has become the leading cause of death in Australia, a development that has prompted public health experts to call for a ‘shift in thinking’ about the disease. An estimated 446,500 people in the country are living with the disease as of 2026, according to data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and the Australian Bureau of Statistics. … a 2024 survey found that more than a quarter of Australians incorrectly believed there was nothing they could do to reduce their risk of dementia. … Estimates suggest that about two in five dementia cases in the country can be prevented.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/dementia-australia-top-death-cause-b2936066.html

  • Thune quashes Trump push to reform filibuster for SAVE Act

    Source: The Hill

    “Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) told GOP colleagues Tuesday that they don’t have the votes to pass a House-approved voting reform bill through the Senate by forcing Democrats to use a talking filibuster to oppose it, rejecting President Trump’s full-court press. Senate Republicans at a Tuesday lunch meeting discussed the prospect of forcing Democrats to actively hold the floor for days — or even weeks — of continuous debate to make it as hard as possible for them to block the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, which Trump called his ‘No.1 priority’ at an issues conference with House Republicans on Monday. Trump warned in Florida on Monday that passing the SAVE Act is critical to helping Republicans keep control of Congress in November.” (03/11/26)

    https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5777802-talking-filibuster-gop-debate/

  • US mortgage applications increase 3.2% amid market volatility

    Source: HousingWire

    “Mortgage applications increased 3.2% from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) weekly mortgage applications survey for the week ending March 6, 2026. On an unadjusted basis, the index increased 4.1% compared with the previous week. The refinance index 0.5% from the previous week and was 81% higher than the same week one year ago. The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 57.8% of total applications from 59.8% the previous week.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.housingwire.com/articles/mba-applications-rise/

  • Nigeria: At least 65 regime troops killed in jihadist raids

    Source: The Guardian [UK]

    “At least 65 Nigerian soldiers have been killed in jihadist raids across the country’s north-east in the last two weeks, as the west African state battles to contain one of the world’s deadliest terror groups. On 5 and 6 March, gunmen from Islamic State West Africa Province (Iswap) overran four military bases in Borno state, the epicentre of the insurgency. Nigerian daily the Punch reported that about 40 soldiers were killed in total in these attacks. In a statement on 7 March, the same day a mass funeral was held for the fallen troops, the military disputed the death toll but did not provide an alternative number. … Last month, 200 US troops arrived in northern Nigeria to train their counterparts, weeks after the US president, Donald Trump, announced airstrikes on terrorist elements in the region.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/11/nigerian-soldiers-killed-jihadist-raids-north-east


  • We can’t afford US government

    Source: Eastern New Mexico News
    by Kent McManigal

    “The U.S. government, with its state and local affiliates, is a much greater threat to your life, liberty, and property than any foreign power in the past century. This includes the old Soviet Union. Which one takes a large percentage of your money before you even see it? Which one then takes more of your money every time you buy something, or demands it in ransom so you’re allowed to keep what you already own? Which one makes and enforces arbitrary rules about the way you’re allowed to live? I’ll give you a hint: it’s not Iran’s evil government. Right now, I’m not extorted to prop up an Iranian government, but if the U.S. government wins this fight, I will be.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.easternnewmexiconews.com/story/2026/03/11/voices/opinion-we-cant-afford-us-government/232962.html

  • The Myth of “National” Resources

    Source: Free Association
    by Sheldon Richman

    “The popular telling of the histories of Iran, Venezuela, and other countries, and their relevance to current U.S. policy, requires that we get something straight. While natural resources exist in such places, those resources do not naturally belong to the said country, people, or government. That would be collectivism and, thus, nonsensical. The proper owners of land and subsurface resources are those who discover and develop them, no matter where they were born or live. They are the Lockean owners (per John Locke’s homesteading principle). This means that someone from outside the territory could be the legitimate owner in a given case. Indigenous persons who had no role in the discovery and development have no natural claim based merely on their birth. That’s no achievement. The foregoing does not mean that outside entrepreneurs may morally disregard the Lockean property rights of indigenous individuals.” (03/11/26)

    https://sheldonrichman.substack.com/p/the-myth-of-national-resources

  • Congressional Republicans and the Ministry of Truth Social

    Source: The Dispatch
    by Jonah Goldberg

    “Let’s state the obvious: We’re at war with Iran. My evidence? Turn on your TV. U.S. forces, working with Israel, killed the supreme leader of Iran and many of his top aides. We sank Iran’s navy and destroyed most of its air force. We bombed thousands of military sites across the region. President Donald Trump, the commander in chief, has demanded ‘unconditional surrender’ from Iran. He routinely refers to this as a ‘war.’ Pete Hegseth, who calls himself the secretary of war, also describes this as a war daily, such as last week when he said, ‘We set the terms of this war.’ The truth that we are at war is so simple that only politicians and lawyers could make it seem complicated. Indeed, a slew of Republican legislators insist we’re not actually at war.” (03/11/26)

    https://thedispatch.com/article/iran-war-congressional-republicans-declaration/

  • Who Cares About Those 175 Dead Little Iranian Girls?

    Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
    by Jacob G Hornberger

    “Who cares about the 175 Iranian girls, who were students at the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school in the town of Minab, Iran, when a U.S. Tomahawk missile slammed into them, killing them all? U.S. national-security state officials? Don’t make me laugh. Despite any public displays of remorse they might express, the truth is that they couldn’t care less about the deaths of those little girls. After all, let’s not forget the obvious: U.S. officials for decades have been targeting those little girls and the rest of the Iranian people with death by starvation and illness through their enforcement of their brutal, vicious, and evil system of economic sanctions.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.fff.org/2026/03/11/who-cares-about-those-175-dead-little-iranian-girls/

  • The Democratic tax fight that’s really over copying Republicans

    Source: Semafor
    by David Weigel

    “Every Democrat agrees that the next election will hinge on which party is better at lowering the cost of living. They’re starting to disagree about how to make their case. For Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., it means a new tax cut that would double the standard deduction and push millions of people off the income tax rolls. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., is preparing to outdo Booker and propose an even larger income tax cut, nearly doubling the number of people who could ignore the IRS. … Critics of Booker and Van Hollen’s plans, including older-line progressives at the Center for American Progress and newer post-Biden players on the left, argue that the party’s mission depends on doing good things with public funds — not pitching taxes as a pox that people need ‘relief’ from.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.semafor.com/article/03/11/2026/the-democratic-tax-fight-thats-really-over-copying-republicans

  • Should SCOTUS Reconsider New York Times v. Sullivan?

    Source: Town Hall
    by Gregory Lyakhov

    “Few constitutional rights generate more debate in American politics than the right to free speech. The First Amendment protects both freedom of speech and freedom of the press, principles often described as absolute pillars of a democratic society. In reality, the Supreme Court has consistently recognized that these freedoms have limits. Courts have long permitted restrictions based on time, place, and manner, and American law has also recognized boundaries when speech collides with competing interests such as national security, defamation, or public safety. The same principle applies to freedom of the press. Newspapers and journalists enjoy broad constitutional protections, but those protections were never intended to create a system in which the press operates without legal accountability. From the earliest days of the republic, American law recognized that publishers could be held responsible for false statements that damage a person’s reputation.” (03/11/26)

    https://townhall.com/columnists/gregory-lyakhov/2026/03/11/should-the-supreme-court-reconsider-new-york-times-v-sullivan-n2672636

  • Trump’s New Tariff Plan Still Asserts a Crisis That Does Not Exist

    Source: Reason
    by Jacob Sullum

    “President Donald Trump’s original plan for addressing the purported threat posed by the longstanding U.S. trade deficit, which the Supreme Court rejected in February, involved declaring an imaginary emergency to justify tariffs under a statute that does not authorize them. His backup plan, which he revealed immediately after that decision, avoids the second difficulty but not the first one.” (03/11/26)

    https://reason.com/2026/03/11/trumps-new-tariff-plan-still-asserts-a-crisis-that-does-not-exist/

  • After Loneliness: Breaking Bread in Authoritarian America

    Source: TomDispatch
    by Mattea Kramer

    “All the way back in 2023, the surgeon general diagnosed Americans as suffering from an epidemic of loneliness. More recently, amid the rise of American fascism, I started to notice that people were not only lonely but had also begun referring to the world as simply ‘the news.’ Perceived that way — as a phenomenon pre-packaged via our devices — our bond with the world was distilled into just two options: consume the news or don’t. A sense of powerlessness is baked into such a perception. By contrast, I remembered once reading an interview with billionaire Laurene Powell Jobs, who described the world as atoms constantly shifting and moving. With intention and focus, she pointed out, you can move those atoms yourself, and so move the world. Baked into that worldview was a sense of interconnectedness, not to mention power. Was such a perspective a luxury of the billionaire class? In fact, no.” (03/10/26)

    https://tomdispatch.com/after-loneliness/

  • The Reagan White House Rejected Trump’s Tariff Power Claims

    Source: Independent Institute
    by Phillip W Magness

    “In his latest bid to salvage his protectionist trade agenda, President Donald Trump imposed a new 10% tariff on all imports to the United States. To justify this move, Trump cited the existence of a trade deficit and invoked an obscure clause of the Trade Act of 1974, called Section 122. This clause allows the president to impose tariffs for up to 150 days; however, its provisions only apply in the presence of a ‘large and serious United States balance-of-payments deficits.’ Trump’s use of Section 122 is illegal because the United States does not currently have a balance-of-payments deficit. … He is the first president to attempt to use this clause for a reason. Previous administrations have examined its text in detail and come to the conclusion that Section 122 simply does not apply to common trade deficits.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.independent.org/article/2026/03/11/reagan-rejected-trumps-tariff/

  • Every Element of Stephen Miller’s Immigration Agenda Is Designed for Ethnic Cleansing

    Source: The UnPopulist
    by Kyle Varner, MD

    “Contemporary debates over U.S. immigration policy are framed almost entirely in the language of pathology: cruelty, incompetence, authoritarian drift, constitutional erosion. These diagnoses are not wrong, but they describe merely surface phenomena while neglecting to account for the scope and intent of the policies, thus obscuring the form of power that generates them. What was sold to voters as a program of robust law enforcement intended to restore order has become something wholly different: a campaign of ethnic cleansing.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/every-element-of-stephen-millers

  • Iran’s new leader could spark a revolution

    Source: Christian Science Monitor
    by staff

    “On Monday, while visiting Australia to compete in a tournament, five members of the Iranian women’s soccer team were struggling in a hotel room over whether to defect and escape suppression back home. Their struggle ended when Naghmeh Danai, an Iranian-Australian and a migration agent, told them, ‘You will have more respect [here].’ … This minor tale of Iranians seeking to be honored on their merits reflects a major theme during the many years of protests in Iran: An authoritarian theocracy purposely set up in 1979 to replace a dynastic monarchy has come to rely on nepotism and crony networks to keep itself in power, denying opportunities for many Iranians and leading to corrupt, ineffective governance.” (03/10/26)

    https://www.csmonitor.com/Editorials/the-monitors-view/2026/0310/Iran-s-new-leader-could-spark-a-revolution

  • Gorsuch’s Take on the Major Questions Doctrine

    Source: Law & Liberty
    by Robert G Natelson

    “Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurring opinion in the tariff case of Learning Resources v. Trump rightfully has garnered favorable attention. This is largely due to its clear explanation of the Supreme Court’s ‘major questions doctrine.’ As recited by Justice Gorsuch, the major questions doctrine is that, ‘to sustain a claim that Congress has granted them an extraordinary power, executive officials must identify clear authority for that power.’ Not all the members of the court agree with that formulation, but it does seem to command a majority of the justices. Justice Gorsuch’s statement of the doctrine, however, leaves a circle open that I would like to close. My thesis is that the major questions doctrine is simply the logical obverse of the doctrine of incidental (or implied) authority.” (03/11/26)

    https://lawliberty.org/gorsuchs-take-on-the-major-questions-doctrine/

  • Command-Shift-War

    Source: Unpopular Front
    by John Ganz

    “This war is notable not for its use of Artificial Intelligence, but for the fact that it is the first war that feels like it’s been launched by A.I: It’s all been done on a level less than thought. Trump’s remarks, Hegseth’s speeches; they all sound like autocompletes or snippets of half-remembered things. When Trump bellows, ‘UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER,’ he knows not what it means; he just heard it somewhere, probably on TV. … In the past, propaganda served the purposes of war; now war serves the purposes of propaganda. But the blood remains real. A.I. will supposedly give us fully automated wars in the future, but it’s here, right now. There’s a blind automatism to this war; It’s a war without thought or deliberation, public or private. It’s war as autocomplete.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.unpopularfront.news/p/command-shift-war

  • Filibuster and Forever

    Source: Bet On It
    by Bryan Caplan

    “You remember how the American filibuster works, right? Quick version: The Senate’s rules require not a simple majority of 51 votes but a supermajority of 60 votes to approve most legislation. However, it only takes a simple majority of 51 votes to change this rule — the so-called ‘nuclear option.’ Why, you may ask, does the filibuster endure? The usual story is “What comes around, goes around.” The other party will eventually get control of House, Senate, and presidency. Ending the filibuster helps your party fulfill its fondest dreams in the short run, but realizes your worst nightmare in the long run. Since both parties know this, the filibuster survives.” (03/11/26)

    https://www.betonit.ai/p/filibuster-and-forever

  • We Are The Villains In This Story

    Source: Caitlin Johnstone, Rogue Journalist
    by Caitlin Johnstone

    “Nobody wants to believe they’re the villain in the story. Nobody wants to believe their government is run by psychopaths who are inflicting unfathomable evils upon populations around the globe in order to rule the world. It’s much nicer to believe you’re the Good Guys. Much easier to sit with the idea that your government might make an innocent mistake here and there, but overall is a driving force for the good of humankind, and is certainly superior to the villains it makes war with. That’s a fiction, though. It’s a comfortable lie. A fairy tale that westerners tell themselves to avoid a profoundly uncomfortable truth: We are the villains. We are the terrorists. We are the tyrants. We are the evil regime. Our soldiers aren’t out there defending our country, they’re out there murdering people for defending their country.” (03/11/26)

    https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2026/03/11/we-are-the-villains-in-this-story/